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Fondues and don'ts.

Your English-language resource for food in Zurich.

No more crappy kebaps!

Some (probably less-addled) folks like to compare the prices of a liter/gallon of milk as a framework for bitching about inflation or where to live more cheaply. I, on the other hand, have long used the esteemed Döner Kebap as a marker of relative food cost between different cities. For example, when I was a student in Berlin, I think a kebap cost about €2.10, which was under US$2 at the time - both the exchange rate and the cost relative to other cities made it a quite excellent place to be a student. Austria, if I recall, was only a bit pricier at around €3 (and infinitely more delicious, so much so that I wrote an article about Graz kebaps from memory on my old blog).

So I'm super glad I wasn't a student in Switzerland, because the crash of the dollar has left the 8 franc döner almost absurdly expensive for what it's worth. And they don't even cut you fresh meat here, preferring to let it marinate/dry out in some sort of steam table. It's just nasty! (Don't even get me started on the bread...)

However, I am easily seduced by quality even at those prices, and that's why I'm so happy to have found Libanon il-Achdar on Hafnerstrasse. Instead of the usual generic döner mystery substance, these guys have substituted a nearly unparalleled range of meats: rosto, a kind of roast beef; kafta, herbed ground beef; sujuk, the Lebanese lamb sausage similar to merguez; and several kinds of chicken: one that's mixed with veggies, one that's not, and one that actually gets cut off a proper spit right into your pita bread - that's right, boys and girls, an actual schawarma!

The delight doesn't stop with meat selection. Unless you get the chicken-on-a-spit, your meat will need to be thrown on the grill. So, while that's happening, you will be asked to pick your secondary ingredients. I suppose you could be picky, but I have always entrusted the counter staff to put on "alles," and I have not been disappointed. You'll always get pickles, cabbage, onions, and, to my great delight, french fries - your lubrication (ie the spread applied to the pita) will change depending on the meat (with the lamb it usually seems to be mayonnaise, but I think when I ordered beef, they used hummus or babaganouj).

While the lamb is advertised as spicy, it's not terribly hot. If you want a bit more heat, ask for it - while there isn't any particularly unique hot sauce to try, the Sriracha hot sauce sauce goes surprisingly well into the mix with almost any meat, and may remind you of banh mi gone by (if only we had some Vietnamese sandwiches here).

I would gladly pay 8 francs for one of the many variations of this delicious sandwich. However, you don't have to. The price for any meat sandwich at Libanon il-Achdar is CHF7. CHF7!!!! Oh, happy day.

So next time you are pondering waiting in line for a crappy kebap with the snotty Swiss teenage boys on lunch break, steer yourself instead to Libanon il-Achdar. There will probably be a line there, too, but you can be assured that the wait is actually worth it.

Libanon il-Achdar
Hafnerstrasse 13
8005 Zürich

Nimmi saves me from food doldrums.

I am quite fond of Nimmi, one of several Sri Lankan restaurants on Josefstrasse. But let me back up a bit. For a year after arriving from NYC to Switzerland, I was living in the burbs. Not only did I not have any cheap ethnic food nearby, I really more or less had no food nearby – I was at the top of a hill and, while I doubt I’ll ever have a more magnificent lake/mountain view, I planned two separate vacations around going back to the city just to eat things with any amount of spice in them.

While the opening of the Thalwil Thai restaurant was an important bridge, it’s not really cheap, per se. That’s why I was so happy when I discovered Nimmi, which IS cheap by Swiss standards, and served as the harbinger of restaurants to be discovered once I moved to Zürich.

Actually I went to Nimmi for the first time on the day I viewed my current apartment, dragging two visiting friends through the neighborhood while I had my internal debate about whether to take the place. Nimmi looked appealing not just because it was different, but because it looked like the kind of places I used to eat in New York – the timeless hole in the wall, though Nimmi is perhaps cleaner than the average NYC joint.

Aside from my own personal reasons, I am fond of Nimmi because the food is commendable. CHF12.50 will buy you Kottu Rotti, which is cut up roti bread mixed and pan fried with the curried meat of your choice (lamb’s a good bet), onions, and chilies (I don’t know if that’s a comprehensive list of ingredients but it gives you the idea). You can put some other goofy starches in there, too, if you are feeling carb-deprived.

In a similar price range, the Masala Dosa is an excellent iteration of the traditional Indian/Sri Lankan stuffed pancake. It doesn’t take the tubular form of the previous Dosas I’d had (specifically Newark Avenue in Jersey City, New Jersey), but makes up for the lack of presentation with roughly twice the spiced potato filling in a folded-over omelet kind of format. It often comes with homemade (and red!) coconut chutney, which is to die for.

There’s plenty else on the menu – for instance, a case full of pre-prepared curries that can be nuked in a variety plate that’s actually pretty good, and I spotted some string hoppers the other day, which is a Sri Lankan specialty I last had on Staten Island. But I keep coming back for the Dosa.

Again, I love Nimmi, so let me couch this next sentence in kindness: the proprietor’s sense of hospitality extends to serving you a dessert that I think is pretty wretched. It consists of generally good, ripe sliced melon and/or pineapple, but drenched in some kind of strawberry syrup that probably would appeal to kids as an ice cream topping. I mean, it’s SWEET. And it comes out before you can even decline.

So, I’ve taken to trying their other desserts as a means of avoiding the dreaded syrup. But even that strategy was foiled last time. Upon hearing they were out of everything but a spherical fritter they called a banana ball, I blanched a bit, but was actually pleasantly surprised to find no fried bananas were contained within. Instead it was a quite dense cake that was neither too banana-y nor too sweet.

How were my machinations stymied, then, you ask?
As I watched in (concealed) horror, they scooped some fruit on top and squirted a long dollop of the strawberry syrup on top...foiled again.

Nimmi
Josefstrasse 137
8005 Zürich

Greetings, new readers.

I want to thank you for somehow stumbling on to my new blog - the Swiss followup to my work on Twenty Bucks a Day. This blog won't be so bounded by cost, simply due to the relatively more expensive price of dining out here in Zurich, but it will cover much of the same terrain, because that's where my heart lies.

So stay tuned, I hope to be back in the next few days with the first post.

--Mike
November 2009
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